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         Hungarian Mythology:     more books (32)
  1. A Hungarian Nabob by Mór Jókai, 2010-01-17
  2. The Tragedy of Hungarian Jewry: Essays, Documents, Depositions (East European Monographs)
  3. Folktales and Society: Story-Telling in a Hungarian Peasant Community (A Midland Book) by Linda Degh, 1989-10
  4. THE NAMELESS CASTLE, Translated from the Hungarian Under the Author's supervision by 1898 MAURUS JOKAI, 2009-05-19
  5. Stories by Foreign Authors: Polish, Greek, Belgian, Hungarian by Various, 2003-06
  6. Tobias and the Dragon: A Hungarian Folk Tale (Folk Tales of the World) by Val Biro, 1989-01
  7. Hungarian Ballads and the European Ballad Tradition
  8. Vallastorteneti tanulmanyok (Hungarian Edition) by Imre Trencsenyi-Waldapfel, 1981
  9. A vegzetes joslat: Tortenetek a gorog-romai mitologiabol (Hungarian Edition) by Maria Pataki, 1984
  10. Gorog regek (Regek es mondak) (Hungarian Edition) by Imre Trencsenyi-Waldapfel, 1976
  11. Sixty Folk-Tales from Exclusively Slavonic Sources by A.H. Wratislaw, 2009-04-08
  12. Vampires' Song by H.I.M., 2009-12-27
  13. The Tomtit in the Rain by Erzsi Gazdag, 1971-09-02
  14. Book of the Sun by Marcell Jankovics, 2002-03-15

21. Publikációs Lista
Class; hungarian mythology Shamanism by Mihaly Hoppal; Magyar Sajtószabadság;Larrisa Gruning on PR Professionalism Education;
http://www.otal.umd.edu/~veghs/vvedit/publist.htm
Summary of publications (in English)
PR Herald Magazin

22. Veszprém - Veszprémi Információs Rendszer
Nagy was also responsible for the rear of the theatre, depicting TheHunting of the Magic Deer, a classic tale of hungarian mythology.
http://www.veszprem.hu/en_index.asp

real estate
Tourist information information offers a surprise. designed by Jakab Fellner, built in 1767. The latest restoration of it was completed in 1997. The Archiepiscopal Archives can also be found in the building, where almost two thousand documents from the 11-14th century are housed. These ancient documents are really precious for all of us, especially for researchers, who can get information about the life of the age and the inhabitants of the surrounding villages. The Archiepiscopal Library prides itself on 60.000 volumes. The collection was based by Bishop Márton Padányi Bíró, who enriched it with 600 books. In 1751 he had a catalogue of the books made, so when he sent his report to Pope Benedict XIV he could proudly mention the collection in it. Queen Gizella , the wife of King Stephen I has always been highly appreciated in the town. A museum housing relics, formerly kept in different churches, is named after her as well. It was necessary to find a building appropriate and worthy to house national treasures, like Baroque paintings and sculptures, graphics and textiles. One of the most precious pieces is a robe from 1480, shot with gold, ornamented with an embroidered cross. Originally it belonged to Bishop Albert Vetési. The vestment exhibited was a present for Márton Padányi Bíró by Maria Therese. Masterpieces of goldsmiths, porcelains and ceramics enrich the collection as well. Not only a museum, but also a chapel is named after Queen Gizella. The main significance of

23. VTK Raamat - Ungari Mütoloogiast
Mihaly Hoppál 2000. Notes on the System of hungarian mythology. Studies onMythology and Uralic Shamanism. Magyar mythologia. (hungarian mythology).
http://www.folklore.ee/seminar/hoppal2.html
Artikkel VTK http://www.folklore.ee/seminar
Allikate erisusest - Vargyas 1978). turul- linnu (kotkale sarnanev suur lind) jutust, rasestas turul rp jumalate ja vaimude tshongod Moldaavias ja kumanjanid Gyimese tshongode . Linnuteele on antud mitmeid nimetusi: Meie Issanda Jeesuse tee, prints Csaba tee markol menny okol head hinged/halvad hinged - Tlk. ) ja horisontaalse vastanduse ( elu/surm - Tlk ). Selline oleks kujutlus maailmast ja teisest ilmast. goblin Isten ja Istennyila Isten ise tengri Istanus Koos jumalaga osaleb ka kurat ( Erlik Boldogasszony Ema Jumalanna kaltes boldog asszony vadleany erdei le vizi ember Vid-Ava , ja Vit-kan . Naisveeasuka ungari nimetus on , teda on kujutatud kauni noore naisena, kuid kuna ta elab vees, siis on tal allpool pihta kala keha. Pagoda zephyr S s szellem tshongode fene, guta, nyavalya 'tont' ja hal kasutavad palokid bankus on kasutusel ainult kumanjanitega bubus-mumus-mummu ja vormelite vasorr 'kuradike' ja 'haldjas' ning boszork
Kirjandus
13-15. Budapest. BERZE-NAGY, J. 1958.
BORNEMISSZA, F. 1955. (Devilish Ghosts). Budapest. BOSNY?K, S. 1980. A moldvai magyarok hitvil?ga. (Folk Beliefs of the Hungarians in Mold?via).

24. Red Stream - Black Metal Sear Bliss Forsaken Symphony CD Red Stream Hungary
This witch represents an olden goddess of nature in hungarian mythology.She also represents the secrecy of creation life and death.
http://www.redstream.org/html/recordDetail.php?ID=5406

25. SEAR BLISS
Grand Destiny is deeply connected to old hungarian mythology. Before Hungary becamea state or country, the Huns were fiery people who came from the east.
http://members.tripod.com/~highday/searbliss.html
THE GRAND DESTINY OF SEAR BLISS
One of the blackened gems coming out from Red Stream Records is Grand Destiny by Sear Bliss of Hungary. Dark, extreme metal may be heard from this unique bandand there is even a mighty horn section involved! Curious? Read on...
Introduce yourself, tell me what you do in Sear Bliss, and how long the band has been together. I'm Andras and I play the bass and do the vocals in Sear Bliss. I formed the band in 1993 so next year will be the 10th anniversary of Sear Bliss. What is the music scene like in Hungary and are there a lot of places for metal bands to play? Is it difficult to get gigs outside of Hungary? Hungary is quite a small country so the scene is small too but there are some very promising and unique bands in every genre of metal over here. Yes, there are a couple of good clubs where the metal bands can play. Since people are really enthusiastic at the gigs in Hungary, it's always good to play over here. Fortunately for Sear Bliss it's not difficult to get gigs outside of Hungary. We toured Europe with Marduk in 1997 and it was a good start. Since then we have many contacts so we play in Holland, Germany, Belgium, etc. each year. Now we are planning an European tour in October." What is the story behind the title Grand Destiny? Is it a concept album and where did you get the ideas for the lyrics?

26. European Folklore Institute
1987 Magyar Mythologia (hungarian mythology by A. IPOLYI A facsimile edition from1854 with Notes and an Introductory Essay by M. HOPPÁL) Budapest Európa.
http://www.folkline.hu/efi/hoppal_eng.html
Director
European Folklore Institute
hoppal@matavnet.hu Personal Born 31 October, 1942. Kassa (Hungary) Married, two daughters
Residence: 1014 Budapest
Telephone:(36)1-201-6237
Mobil: 06-30-644-789 Education
University of Debrecen, Hungary 1961-1966
Diploma of Ethnography and Hungarian Literature and Linguistics
Ph.D. (Summa cum laude) 1972
Candidate of Doctor of Science 1990 Languages Hungarian, English, Russian Employment Ethnographic Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Research Fellow 1967-1971
Scientific Secretary 1972-1975 Senior Research Fellow 1976- Honours Medal of the University of Helsinki (Ganander Lecture 1983) Scholarships 1969- Soviet Semiotic Studies (MTA=Hungarian Academy of Sciences) Moscow, USSR - 3 months 1972- Computational Linguistics and the Humanities (IBM) Pisa, Italy - 1 month 1973- Semiotic Studies (Centro Internazionale di Semiotica) Urbino, Italy - 2 months 1974- Semiotics and Text Theory (Centro Int. di Semiotica) Urbino, Italy - 1 month 1975- Comparative Mythology (MTA - Academy of USSR) Moscow, USSR - 6 months

27. Hungarian Literature By Albert Tezla
A collection of the author's studies dealing with the writers, various literaryforms, learned societies, literary history, and hungarian mythology from the
http://www.mek.iif.hu/porta/szint/egyeb/katalog/hunlit/html/dok-03.htm
VIII. GENERAL HISTORIES OF HUNGARIAN LITERATURE
[See also nos. 23, 176, 177 and 178. For studies of Hungarian literary history, see nos. 39, 152, 451, 452, 454, and 455.] Alszeghy Zsolt, Brisits Frigyes, Sík Sándor és Szetey András. A magyar irodalom története. I-II. rész. Budapest: Szent István-Társulat, 1945. A combined literary history and anthology of Hungarian literature from the Middle Ages to 1945, divided into literary periods, with a discussion of each period and of each author preceding selections from his works. For students in the Gymnasium. Pt. I, Middle Ages to 1825; pt. II, 1825 to 1945. NN GeLU GyBH ItFU Badics Ferenc és Beöthy Zsolt (szerk.). A magyar irodalom története. Képes díszmunka két kötetben. Budapest: Athenaeum Irodalmi és Nyomdai r.t., 1906-1907 . [Revised and enlarged edition] An illustrated Hungarian literary history from ancient times to 1867, revised and enlarged and prepared on the basis of results established in larger and smaller monographs from the hands of several Hungarian scholars. Vol. I, Ancient times to the appearance of Károly Kisfaludy; vol. II, Appearance of Károly Kisfaludy to the Compromise of 1867. NN FiHI GeLBM GeLU ... GyGGaU Bánhegyi Jób.

28. The Legend Of The Turul Hawk- Hungarian
The Turul is a giant mythical falcon, a messenger of god in hungarian mythology,who sits on top of the tree of life along with the other spirits of unborn
http://www.stavacademy.co.uk/mimir/turulhawk.htm
The Legend of the Turul Hawk
by Fred Hamori
Background
According to the legend of origin of the Árpád clan, it was the divine intervention of god, through his messenger the Turul, which founded the royal family. The following is a recounting of the legend by the chronicler "Anonymous", the royal scribe of King Béla III (1172-1196).(Béla=Bay-la) "In the year of our lord 819, Ügyek, the descendant of King Magog (The Scythian King Magog of the Bible lived in Northern Mesopotamia during the reign of the Assyrian king, Ashur-banipal, according to surviving Assyrian records.) and a royal leader of the land of Scythia, married the daughter of Ened-Belia, whose name was Emeshe. From her was born their first son Álmos.(In modern Hungarian the name Álmos means sleepy/dreamer, the ancient Ugrian form of the word dream however was ADOM, ADAM. The Kiev Chronicles called him Olma.) "The boy obtained his name because of the unusual circumstances of his birth, when his mother in a vision saw the great Turul descend from heaven on her and made her fertile. A great spring welled forth from her womb and began flowing westward. It grew and grew until it became a torrent which swept over the snow covered mountains into the beautiful lowlands on the other side. There the waters stopped and from the water grew a wondrous tree with golden branches. She imagined famed kings were to be born from her descendants, who shall rule not here in their present lands but over that distant land in her dreams, surrounded with tall mountains."

29. The Origin Of The Legend Of The Stag
heaven. In hungarian mythology Nimrod is the son of Etana, just asin KushanScythian Kush-Tana is the ancestor of the nation. In
http://www.whitestag.org/ceremonies/ws_myth.html
Leadership Development and
Junior Leader Training
Teaching Competencies of Leadership
Subscribe JLT
The Origin of the Legend of the White Stag
The Legend of the Wonderous Hind
By Fred Hámori . Adapted with permission from his site " The Legend of the Stag " .
Scouting Ceremonies and Spirit and Traditions
Ceremonies in Junior Leader Training Finding a Theme The Purpose in Ceremonies When Ceremonies are Appropriate ... Fun Songs
Discussion
Have an opinion or an idea to share? Add your comments on the our Bulletin Board. The Hungarian Legend of the Wondrous Stag is one of the oldest legends of the nation. It is so old that it is found in various forms among those nations who were the distant relatives or neighbors of the Hungarians, long before their settlement in Hungary. The meaning and the wording of the legends may have changed slightly but they all have much in common. Today the remaining legend is relatively short, whereas in the past it was probably much more extensive. However the Hungarian legend despite it's brevity includes in it many important points some of which can be found in most of the related legends found in other cultures. It is these points which show that once, in the remote antiquity, these people were neighbors or some were even related.

30. Ordog
A demonic creature from hungarian mythology. It personifies the darkaspects of the world. A demonic creature from hungarian mythology.
http://www.pantheon.org/articles/o/ordog.html
Home Areas Other mythologies Search ... Feedback
Ordog
A demonic creature from Hungarian mythology. It personifies the dark aspects of the world. Later it is identified with the devil. Related information None
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31. Sear Bliss Interview In Terrorizer 52
Is it maybe an indirect influence from that? Yeah, we were quite interested insome stories which you can find in hungarian mythology or Hungarian history.
http://www.searbliss.hu/press/intt52.html
Sear Bliss
(Terrorizer #52 (March 1998)) It's usually a feat of inhuman strength for an underground band to break out of its domestic scene and successfully enter the world stage. However, when that band comes from such un unlikely place as Hungary and goes to achieve the success that Sear Bliss have, surely something not of this world is at play. Gregory Whalen speaks to András Nagy about his group's spookily good new album "The Haunting". When we last encountered Sear Bliss, back in the long hot sticky summer of 1996, they were wide-eyed young hopefuls. Their debut album "Phantoms" had just been released on II Moons, the Dark/Black Metal subsidiary of the Dutch Mascot label, and been awarded CD Of The Month by Holland's legendary Aardschock magazine. Frontman András Nagy was, shall we say, a "challenging" interview partner, his English as broken as the phoneline was crackly. Getting answers from him was a slow, laborious process that more often than not requiring a great deal of prompting, only to be rewarded with a tentative "Yezz". Eighteen months on, and you can barely get him to shut up. A simple "What's up?", for example, is returned with an epic monologue cataloguing Sear Bliss' adventures since "Phantoms" was released. The new members, Viktor Max Scheer on guitar and Zoltan Schönberger on drums, trumpet player Gergely Szûcs having doubled up on keyboards, have breathed new life into Sear Bliss. Having come from different musical backgrounds, they have brought diverse musical influences as well as over thirteen years of experience into the band, and "The Haunting" is a much stronger, more dynamic album than "Phantoms" as a result.

32. MythHome: Printed References For Mythology
Chinese Classical Creation Dictionaries Egyptian Encyclopedia Finland Greek HawaiianHindu hungarian Magyar Mayan Micronesia mythology (General) Native
http://www.mythome.org/PrintRef.html
Mythology References in Print
Last Updated: Thursday, July 25, 2002
African
Anglo-Saxon Astronomy Britain and King Arthur Too ... Women
AFRICAN BIBLIOGRAPHY
African Myths:Retold , Tate, Eleanora E, 1997
Africa: Legends of,Tembo , Mwizenge, 1998
African Mythology ,Parrinder, Geoffrey,, 1982
African Mythology :Essentia l, Mbitu, Ngangor, 1997
,Kanppert, Jan, 1997
African Traditional Religion . Idowu, E. Bolaji. New York: Orbis Books, 1973
African Traditional Religion Aboriginal mythology , Narogin, Mudrooroo, 1997 Comparative Studies of African Traditional Religions , Emefie Ikenga-Metuh, IMICO Publishers,1987 Dahomey Volume I and II, Herskovits, M.J., Dictionary of African Mythology , Scheub, H. , Fon of Dahomey , Argyle W.J., 1966 Ifa Divination Poetry , Abinbole, W. (1977) Ifa an Exposition of Ifa Literary Corpus , Abimbola, W. (1976) Nigerian Studies ,Dennet, R. E. London: Macmillan., 1910. Oral Literature in Africa , Finnegan Olodumare: God in Yoruba Belief . Idowu, E. Bolaji. 1963. Religion and the Dramatization of Life , Schoffeleeis, 1997 Ritual Cosmos. Zuesse, Evan M. 1979.

33. Serbian Lies, Mythology, And Imaginary History
Serbs the total that they claim, except through mythology and imaginary accomplishedby the very careful and accurate Austrohungarian administration, records
http://www.geocities.com/serbian_lies/
Serbian Lies, Mythology, and Imaginary History
by Amira Dzirlo
[excerpts from Washington Report on Middle-East Affairs (Jan/Feb 1995, page 16)]
Amira Dzirlo is an architectural engineer and historian from Washington D.C.
Among many false Serbian claims in connection with settlement negotiations (1992-1995) was the statement that "according to the registry, Serbs own 64 percent of the land of Bosnia-Herzegovina, but they are prepared to return 15 percent of its territory to the Bosniacs (Bosnian Muslims) out of the total 70 percent which they have captured." A Significant Fabrication This is certainly not their only fabrication, but it is nonetheless a very significant one. It can be clearly and quickly disproven by checking any geography textbook from before World War II. This will show that 51 percent of the territory of Bosnia-Herzegovina was classified as forested, whereas 49 percent was either tillable or used for raising livestock. Of the forested area, 95 percent was owned by the state, meaning it was the communal property of all its citizens, while only 31 percent of the land classified as agricultural was privately owned, by Bosniacs, Croats and Serbs. Thus, only about 15 percent of the land of Bosnia-Herzegovina was in private hands, which cannot bring the Serbs the total that they claim, except through mythology and imaginary history.

34. Usenet FAQs By Category
FAQ; House FAQ; Housing Nontrad FAQ; Howard Stern; HP; Humor; hungarian;Hypertext FAQ. I. Inn FAQ; FAQ; Multimedia; Music; mythology. N. NaturalLang
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/by-category.html
Search FAQs - Show References Search Subject/Archive Names Search Article Headers Usenet FAQs By Category By Archive-name By Author By Newsgroup ... Options Search FAQs - Show References Search Subject/Archive Names Search Article Headers A B C D ... Help
Last Update April 07 2003 @ 01:27 AM

35. LANGUAGE, LINGUSTICS & MYTHOLOGY
CarnegieMellon; Beowulf Text; LangLinks; hungarian Language; hungarian Runic Writing; mythologyLinks Hittite/Hurrian mythology REF; Assyro-Babylonian mythology FAQ
http://graham.main.nc.us/~bhammel/lang.html
Language, Linguistics
and Mythology Links
A beginning of wisdom is to call things by their right names.
Language Sites
  • The Oxford English Dictionary On Line
  • Online Language Dictionaries and Translators
  • Terminology Collection: Online Dictionaries
  • Dictionaries On-Line ...
  • PROJECT GUTENBERG OFFICIAL HOME SITE Mythology Links
  • Hittite/Hurrian Mythology REF
  • Assyro-Babylonian Mythology FAQ.
  • Sumerian Mythology FAQ
  • Canaanite/Ugaritic Mythology FAQ, ver. 1.1 ... READ WARNING BEFORE SENDING E-MAIL
    The URL for this document is:
    http://graham.main.nc.us/~bhammel/lang.html
    Created: 1997
    Last Updated: January 28, 2001
  • 36. The Hungarian Quarterly, VOLUME XL * No. 156 * Winter 1999 - Tamás Koltai
    backproject onto a curtain the fata morgana of Hortobágy, the very symbol of Hungarianillusions, for the belated creation of theatrical mythology itself is
    http://www.hungary.com/hungq/no156/149.html
    Tamás Koltai
    Tragedies and Comedies
    Imre Madách: The Tragedy of Man • Tragédia-jegyzetek (Tragedy Notes) • Géza Bodolay: A magyar mennyegzõ (The Hungarian Wedding) • István Tasnádi: Titanic vízirevû (Titanic Water Show) • György Spiró: Honderû (National Mirth) László Babarczy, who directed this adaptation for the Csiky Gergely Theatre of Kaposvár, could safely assume that the audience was familiar with similar cases from the press and television. The book has lost none of its topicality since its original publication; indeed, after the Communist intermezzo-with the revival of true parliamentary democracy and a market economy-history seems to have picked up the thread remarkably easily. This is all emphasized, when the relatives asking for money call out to Chief Prosecutor Kopjáss from the auditorium, clambering up the stage from there, while he occasionally walks to the front of the stage, so as to peer into the future from a tiny wrought-iron pulpit in the manner of a man who is satisfied with his prospects. By recalling similar "cases" from their own experience, the audience theatrically, or mythologically if you like, relives the situaiton and judges accordingly. The allegory forms only the tip of the iceberg; the irony of Titanic Water Show delivers its impact below the water line, with the precise characterization and verbal mannerisms of the figures, which graphically express the mentality of the age, its delusory mythology based on commercialism. Tasnádi's stylistic armory spans from cabaret wit to vulgarity. But only one half comes from the text; the other half is from the actors of Bárka Theatre, directed by Eszter Novák.

    37. Monroe County (NY) Library System - Other World Mythology
    Germanic Germanic Folklore and mythology Germanic mythology GermanicMyths, Legends, and Sagas. hungarian Myths and Legends of Hungary.
    http://mcls.rochester.lib.ny.us/mythology/other_world_mythology.html

    Other World Mythology
    Asian Assyro-Babylonian Australian Aboriginal Finnish ...
    Welcome to World Mythology

    Asian:
    Chinese
    Ancient Chinese Myths

    Chinese Myths and Fantasies

    Deities in Chinese Mythology

    Japanese
    Japanese Founding Myth

    Japanese Gods and Goddesses
    Sun, Moon, and Storm Korean Myths and Legends of ancient Korea Assyro-Babylonian Gateways to Babylon Sumerian Mythology FAQs Australian Aboriginal Stories of the Dreaming Finnish Kalevala: the Finnish national epic Mythical idea of the World : a collection of articles on the Kalevala The Popular Beliefs of the Finns French Legends of Charlemagne Searching for the lost treasure of Rennes-Le-Chateau The Sacred landscape geometry of Rennes-Le-Chateau The Song of Roland : Online Medieval and Classical Library Release. Anonymous Old French epic, dating perhaps as early as the middle 11th century Germanic Germanic Folklore and Mythology Germanic Mythology Germanic Myths, Legends, and Sagas Hungarian Myths and Legends of Hungary Indian Animals of Indian Mythology Devi: the great Goddess Myths and legends of Indian temples Native American Norse Classic Norse Tales FAQs about Norse Mythology Norse Valkyrie Polish Gods and Goddesses of Polish origin Slavic Ancient Lithuanian Mythology and Religion Myths and Legends from the Slavic culture Okana's Web Virtual Reference Desk ... Member Library Directory Explore the Internet Who We Are Community Information LIBRA Home Send comments to Webmaster Monroe County (NY) Library System

    38. Mythology's Mything Links: Autumn Equinox, 1999
    http//www.sunytccc.edu/academic/graphdesg/dordona.htm This is Mary B. Kelly's vibrantpainting of a Black Goddess, the hungarian Harvest Goddess, Dordona.
    http://www.mythinglinks.org/autumnequinox99.html
    AUTUMN greetings
    "Samovila with the Spirits of the Forest"
    (An Ancient Slavic Goddess)
    Courtesy of Sandra Stanton
    As this last year of the millennium winds down,
    may this eerie, halting love song from Hungary remind us of how fragile life is
    human life, surely,
    but also the lives of other creatures,
    trees and plants,
    waters and winds. In this season ushered in by the autumnal equinox,
    may the weather be kind, may there be enough food for all creatures, may the diminishing light in our daytime skies be met by an increasing compassion and tolerance in our hearts. Warmly, Kathleen Autumn Equinox arrives when the sun enters Libra on Thursday, 23 September 1999. In the western United States, this will take place when it's still dark 4:31am (PDT); on the East Coast, it'll be past dawn 7:31am (EDT); in Europe and further east, it'll be mid-morning 11:31am (GMT) Note : We may all wish for abundant harvests, but the reality is that many people will go hungry in the coming months. Here's one way to help: every time you go to The Hunger Site and click on the "Donate Free Food" button, each of the day's sponsors will make a donation of 1/4 cup of rice, wheat, maize or other food staple to a hungry person. You can do this once a day, and it's free. This is a form of public relations for the sponsoring corporations because it associates the company name and its products with a good cause (it costs them about $350-700/day of sponsorship). The food donations are distributed through the United Nations World Food Program, the world's largest food aid organization, with projects in 80 countries.

    39. Mythology's MythingLinks: Common Themes / Floods & Rainbows: Mythologies & Scien
    From The Creation Story Copyright © by hungarianborn artist, Judy Racz (usedwith This is a page of well chosen links to worldwide flood mythology from NS
    http://www.mythinglinks.org/ct~floods.html
    MYTH*ING LINKS
    by Kathleen Jenks, Ph.D.
    22 April 2001:
    have been moved to my new page;
    page.
    Author's Note:
    Late morning, Thursday, 30 December 1999 When I put more links on this page online last night, I thought it was finally complete. That's the second time this week that I've been wrong about this page. A few days ago, I thought I only had four links left to do on this one. Instead, once they were done on Tuesday afternoon, I unexpectedly discovered more than a dozen still untouched in my bookmark file. Well, I thought, they'll have to wait until spring or summer. Maybe I'll have more time then. Maybe my eyes will be less tired. But a curious obsession gripped me Tuesday night and yesterday morning: all I could think about was adding those links, finishing the page by the end of the year. But why ? I wondered. Why should I want to complete this page when I have so many others demanding my attention? Besides, my thoughts ran on, I honestly don't want to complete any particular page in these last few days. I'm tired. I just want to continue updating a few stray broken links and leave it at that. I couldn't, however. For whatever the reasons, I had to finish this one and so I did annotating the links much of yesterday until I could finally publish the page late last night with 50KB more than when I'd started.

    40. Behind The Name: I
    m Greek mythology, Greek Ancient Greek form of JASON. IB m Danish Danish pet formof JACOB. IBBIE f English Pet form of ISABEL. IBOLYA f hungarian Means violet
    http://www.behindthename.com/nm/i.html
    t h e e t y m o l o g y a n d h i s t o r y o f f i r s t n a m e s I
    A
    B C D ... Z IACCHUS-IOAN IOANA-IZZY IACCHUS m Greek Mythology (Latinized)
    Derived from Greek iacho meaning "to shout". This is the solemn name of the Greek god Dionysos used in the Eleusinian mysteries. IAGAN m Scottish
    Modern form of the Scottish name , a pet form of AODH IAGO m Welsh, Spanish
    Pronounced: ee-AW-go
    Welsh and Spanish form of JACOB . This is the name of the villain in Shakespeare's tragedy 'Othello'. IAIN m Scottish
    Scottish form of JOHN IAKOPA m Hawaiian
    Hawaiian form of JACOB IAN m Scottish, English
    Pronounced: EE-an
    Modern Scottish form of JOHN IANCU m Romanian
    Romanian pet form of JOHN IANTHA f English Variant of IANTHE IANTHE f Greek Mythology Means "violet flower", derived from Greek ion "violet" and anthos "flower". This was the name of an ocean nymph in Greek mythology. IANTHINA f Elaborated form of IANTHE IANTO m Welsh Pet form of IFAN IARFHLAITH m Irish Composed of the Irish elements ior , of unknown meaning, and flaith "lord". Saint Iarfhlaith was a 6th-century bishop from Galway, Ireland.

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